Baptist ethi­cist and the­olo­gian Dr. Roger E. Olson (pic­tured) recent­ly issued a call for Christian church­es to pub­licly stand against the death penal­ty for Christian rea­sons.” A pro­fes­sor of Christian Theology and Ethics at Baylor University’s George W. Truett Theological Seminary, Dr. Olson writes in an essay for the the­ol­o­gy web­site Patheos​.com that authen­tic Christians must oppose the death penal­ty.” He says that, while “[t]here are many sec­u­lar rea­sons to abol­ish the death penal­ty,” there are also the­o­log­i­cal rea­sons why church oppo­si­tion to cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment should be non-nego­tiable. Christians believe that every indi­vid­ual human being might be some­one cho­sen by God for his sal­va­tion and for his ser­vice,” he writes. When we take anoth­er human life unnec­es­sar­i­ly, we usurp God’s pre­rog­a­tive for that person’s even­tu­al sal­va­tion or, if they are already saved, for that person’s future ser­vice for the Kingdom of God.” Dr. Olson’s essay urges all Christian church­es to take pub­lic stands against the death penal­ty. I believe the Christian rea­sons for oppos­ing the death penal­ty are so strong that cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment ought to be, as slav­ery was in the mid-19th cen­tu­ry, an issue for a church strug­gle’ that divides if sad­ly nec­es­sary. At the very least, Christian pas­tors and oth­er lead­ers ought to preach against cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment from their pul­pits and in their newsletters.”

(B. Allen, Is oppo­si­tion to death penal­ty a non-nego­tiable for Christians? Yes, says one the­olo­gian,” Baptist News Global, March 8, 2016; R. Olson, Why Authentic Christians Must Oppose the Death Penalty,” Patheos​.com, March 7, 2016.) See Religion.

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